A Sheraton Revival work table, the turned column raised on…
click the photo to enlarge
A Sheraton Revival work table, the turned column raised on quadruped base, the lid opens to reveal various size compartments, decorative inlaid stringing. 60 cm x 45 cm x 72 cm

You must be a subscriber, and be logged in to view price and dealer details.

Subscribe Now to view actual auction price for this item

When you subscribe, you have the option of setting the currency in which to display prices to $Au, $US, $NZ or Stg.

This item has been sold, and the description, image and price are for reference purposes only.
  • Turning - Any part of a piece of furniture that has been turned and shaped with chisels on a lathe. Turned sections include legs, columns, feet, finials, pedestals, stretchers, spindles etc. There have been many varieties and fashions over the centuries: baluster, melon, barley-sugar, bobbin, cotton-reel, rope-twist, and so on. Split turning implies a turned section that has been cut in half lengthwise and applied to a cabinet front as a false decorative support.
  • Thomas Sheraton - Thomas Sheraton (1751-1806) was born in Stockton on Tees in the north of England. He was apprenticed to a local cabinetmaker and after working as a cabinetmaker, Sheraton moved to London about 1790. Although he described himself as a cabinet-maker, like Chippendale, no definite piece of furniture can be traced to him as maker. Nevertheless, he was immensely influential and in 1791-4 published his four volume book 'The Cabinet-Maker and Upholsterer's Drawing Book'. The books were used as source of design by the furniture-making trade , who often simplified or modified the designs to suit their own preferences. Sheraton furniture is marked by restraint and sophistication, elegance and discretion, though he also found time to invent fanciful combination furniture.
  • Inlay - Decorative patterns inserted into the main body of a piece of furniture, generally in wood of contrasting colour and grain, though brass, ivory, ebony, shell and sometimes horn have been used. Inlay may consist of a panel of well figured timber inset into a cabinet door front, geometric patterns, or complex and stylized designs of flowers, swags of foliage, fruits and other motifs. As a general rule, in pieces where the carcase is constructed in the solid, the inlay is relatively simple such as stringing, cross banding and herringbone banding. Where more elaborate and decorative work was required veneer was used. Inlay has been fashionable from at least the latter half of the 17th century, when a variety of elaborate forms were developed
  • Column - An architectural feature sometimes used for decorative effect and sometimes as part of the supporting construction. Columns should generally taper slightly towards the top. They may be plain or decorated with carving, fluting or reeding. Columns may be fully rounded or, more commonly, half-rounded and attached with glue, screws or pins to the outer stiles of doors, or the facing uprights on cabinets and bureaux.
  • Stringing - Fine inlaid lines, in contrasting colour to the carcase timber, found mainly on furniture made in the styles of the later 18th and early 19th centuries. Stringing, which may be of satinwood, pine, ebony, horn, brass or occasionally ivory, is found principally on drawer fronts, around the outer edges of usually tapered legs and French bracket feet, around the edges of inlaid panels and between the joint of the cross banding and carcase timber on table tops, chests of drawers, cabinets etc. The effect is to emphasize the line of the piece and add to the impression of lightness and elegance. Stringing also occurs in Sheraton-revival-style furniture of the later 19th and early 20th centuries.

This item has been included into following indexes:

Visually similar items

A Tasmanian Colonial occasional table, huon pine, musk, blackwood, cedar, beefwood, casuarina and myrtle, circa 1845 A Tasmanian Colonial occasional table, huon pine, musk, blackwood, cedar, beefwood, casuarina and myrtle, mid 19th century pencil inscripti

Sold by in for
You can display prices in $Au, $US, $NZ or Stg.

A Killarney Arbutus marquetry games table, Irish, circa 1860, the hinged rectangular top ornately inlaid with a central Muckross Abbey roundel flanked by fern leaves within an ornate foliate and berry border, opening to an interior inlaid for chess, backga

Sold by in for
You can display prices in $Au, $US, $NZ or Stg.

A William IV flame mahogany flap-top tea table, raised on octagonal column, the quatrefoil base with paw feet. 91 cm x 90 cm x 76 cm

Sold by in for
You can display prices in $Au, $US, $NZ or Stg.

A William IV ebony inlaid oak table, 72 cm high, 71 cm wide, 71 cm deep. Provenance: The property of the late Sir Tristan and Lady Antico

Sold by in for
You can display prices in $Au, $US, $NZ or Stg.